Elected Losers. How Party Performance Affects Legislators’ Satisfaction with Democracy

Does party performance in elections shape elected politicians’ satisfaction with democracy? This article argues that elected officials grow more dissatisfied with democracy when their party loses influence over the executive or legislative branch.

Cruz, Daniel; Christoffer H. Dausgaard (2025) - Working Paper

The Influence of Episodic Information on Political Elites: Evidence from Chile

This paper explores the effect of anecdotes on political elites. It shows that anecdotes (or episodic information) have a substantially stronger effect than that of statistical information in several outcomes

Cruz, Daniel (2025) - Political Behavior

Unreliable yet influential? Political Elites and Interest Groups as Source Cues

The persuasion models of influence on the political decision-making process suggest that interest groups provide information to convince politicians to change or maintain their positions on a policy. In this paper, I argue that to correctly assess the models’ claim, we have to understand how politicians perceive interest groups as information sources and whether their perceived credibility affects how persuasive they are.

Cruz, Daniel (2026) - Working Paper

Why are Politicians More Likely to Learn From Neighbors? Behavioral Evidence From Three Advanced Democracies

Empirical work on policy diffusion has established that policymakers are more likely to learn from the experiences of neighbors. Yet, the underlying mechanism behind spatially clustered policy learning remains unclear. We adjudicate between mechanisms using data from two field experiments.

Cruz, Daniel, Miguel M. Pereira (2025) - Working Paper